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![]() English | MP3 | M4B | ASIN: B08ZSZX5RX | 2021 | 46 min | 63.3 MB Feelings of anxiety are never pleasant. What's worse is feeling helpless and the lack of control over your mind when you are going through anxious moments. It seems to snowball and get worse and worse over time, all the while draining your self-confidence and ability to deal with stressful situations or upcoming events. This book is just a few tips either I or someone close to me have used to treat anxiety in order to live a happier life! ![]() English | ASIN: B0B4F7F7CN | 2022 | 8 hours and 14 minutes | MP3 | M4B | 226 MB This fully updated special edition of the classic complete guide to the edible species that grow around us includes a new foreword from the author and a plate section with identification guides for all major species. Food for Free is a complete guide to help you safely identify edible species that grow around us, together with detailed field identification notes and recipes. In this stunning 50th anniversary edition, Richard Mabey's updated text is accompanied by a wealth of practical information on identifying, collecting, cooking and preparing, as well as history and folklore. Beautifully written and produced in an easily digestible format, Food for Free will inspire us to be more self-sufficient and make use of the natural resources around us to enhance our lives. ![]() English | ASIN: B07BFGZQK1 | 2018 | MP3 | M4B | 4h 25m | 364.1 MB "In Following the Red Bird, Kate Rademacher traces the steps of her journey into Christianity with suspense, grace, and power. She describes with unfailing honesty and integrity how she experienced God calling her into a relationship with Jesus, to baptism, and to a life of Christian discipline and practice. As we follow her riveting and joyful story, she inspires us to discern how God might be calling us, too." "" The Rev. Liz Dowling-Sendor, co-author of Wide Open Spaces: Women Exploring Call Through Stories and Reflections ![]() English | ASIN: B09W9ZHS2X | 2022 | 12 hours and 10 minutes | MP3 | M4B | 334 MB Foley is a story of courage and quiet heroism in the face of great evil—a reminder of the impact that one brave individual can have on the lives of many. As the horror of Nazism tightened its grip on Germany, Jews found themselves trapped and desperate. For many, their only hope of salvation came in the form of a small, bespectacled British man: Frank Foley. Working as a Berlin Passport Control Officer, Foley helped thousands of Jews to flee the country with visas and false passports, personally entering the camps to get Jews out, and sheltering those on the run from the Gestapo in his own apartment. Described by a Jewish leader as "the Pimpernel of the Jews," Foley was an unsung hero of the Holocaust. But why is this extraordinary man virtually unknown, even in Britain? The reason is simple: Foley was MI6 head of station in Berlin, bound to secrecy by the code of his profession. ![]() English | ASIN: B0B2JGT4FP | 2022 | 13 hours and 7 minutes | MP3 | M4B | 716 MB The future is sh*t: the literal kind. For most of human history we've been, well, disinclined to take a closer look at our body's natural product—the complex antihero of this story—save for gleaning some prophecy of our own health. But if we were to take more than a passing look at our poop, we would spy a veritable cornucopia of possibilities. We would see potent medicine, sustainable power, and natural fertilizer to restore the world's depleted lands. We would spy a time capsule of evidence for understanding past lives and murderous ends. We would glimpse effective ways of measuring and improving human health from the cradle to the grave, early warnings of community outbreaks like COVID-19, and new means of identifying environmental harm—and then reversing it. ![]() English | ASIN: B0BDBXQTX8 | 2022 | 3 hours and 55 minutes | MP3 | M4B | 108 MB Fluid mechanics is an important branch of physics concerned with the way in which fluids, such as liquids and gases, behave when in motion and at rest. A quintessential interdisciplinary field of science, it interacts with many other scientific disciplines, from chemistry and biology to mathematics and engineering. This Very Short Introduction presents the field of fluid mechanics by focusing on the underlying physical ideas and using everyday phenomena to demonstrate them, from dripping taps to swimming ducks. Eric Lauga shows how this set of fundamental physical concepts can be applied to a wide range of flow behaviors and highlights the role of fluid motion in both the natural and industrial worlds. This book also considers future applications of fluid mechanics in science.
![]() English | ASIN: B00ZAJ8TIQ | 2015 | MP3 | M4B | 40 min | 55.5 MB There is a whole new world out there, and it is still possible to draw a huge crowd to your website.
![]() English | MP3 | M4B | ISBN-10: 1662274378 | 2021 | 31 min | 42.7 MB Everyone has a passion. It often manifests during childhood and is pursued through play or it is stumbled upon as we age. Unfortunately, most of these passions are put aside for more practical things like work and building a family. Children are free to actively pursue the things that interest them, but as they age they are encouraged to go after more practical pursuits. However, it isn't impossible or impractical to continue to follow your passion even as you age.
![]() English | ASIN: B09KYJ7ZDM | 2022 | 5 hours and 6 minutes | MP3 | M4B | 141 MB From Pulitzer Prize winner Annie Proulx—comes a riveting, revelatory history of our wetlands, their ecological role, and what their systematic destruction means for the planet. A lifelong environmentalist, Annie Proulx brings her wide-ranging research and scholarship to the subject of wetlands and the vitally important yet little understood role they play in preserving the environment—by storing the carbon emissions that greatly contribute to climate change. Fens, bogs, swamps, and marine estuaries are the earth's most desirable and dependable resources, and in four stunning parts, Proulx documents the long-misunderstood role of these wetlands in saving the planet. Taking us on a fascinating journey through history, Proulx shows us the fens of 16th-century England to Canada's Hudson Bay lowlands, Russia's Great Vasyugan Mire, America's Okeefenokee National Wildlife Refuge, and the 19th-century explorers who began the destruction of the Amazon rain forest. Along the way, she writes of the diseases spawned in the wetlands—the Ague, malaria, Marsh Fever—and the surprisingly significant role of peat in industrialization.
![]() English | ASIN: B0BG3JBF23 | 2022 | 10 hours and 55 minutes | MP3 | M4B | 301 MB In this provocative biography, Mary Sarah Bilder looks to the Age of the Constitution to investigate the rise of a radical new idea in the English-speaking world: female genius. Bilder finds the perfect exemplar of this phenomenon in Eliza Harriot Barons O'Connor. This pathbreaking female educator delivered a University of Pennsylvania lecture attended by George Washington as he and other Constitutional Convention delegates gathered in Philadelphia. As the first such public female lecturer, her courageous performance likely inspired the gender-neutral language of the Constitution. |